New York Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis (24) warms up before the game. The Jets are entertaining offers for the star. / Kelley L Cox, USA TODAY Sports

by Jim Corbett, USA TODAY Sports

by Jim Corbett, USA TODAY Sports

PHOENIX -- New York Jets owner Woody Johnson stood against a window of the Arizona Biltmore resort, hemmed in by 18 media members wondering about the uncertain future of Jets all-pro cornerback Darrelle Revis.

It appears Johnson and new general manager John Idzik will spend the NFL owner's meetings entertaining offers for the shutdown corner, who is coming off a season-ending torn left anterior cruciate ligament suffered early last October against the Miami Dolphins. Johnson was asked if he expects Revis will be with the Jets this season.

"It depends, we'd like to have him on the team. But we're trying to make the team better," Johnson said.

The Jets appear stuck until an interested team becomes convinced that Revis is well on his way to returning to four-time Pro Bowl form and worth the high draft picks - and new contract -- it would take to secure him past the 2013 season.

Revis, 27, is entering the final year of his four-year, $46 million deal.

Dumervil buzz: Free agent defensive end Elvis Dumervil has hired new agents following the fax machine fiasco that factored into his release from the Denver Broncos on Friday. Dumervil signed on with CAA, headed by Tom Condon and Ben Dogra, after firing agent Marty Magid.

Dumervil, meanwhile, has indicated that he wants to remain with the Broncos. Do the Broncos want him back?

"We're doing whatever we can to make us better," Broncos coach John Fox told USA TODAY Sports. "If that works out, great."

Dumervil was set to accept a $4 million salary reduction to $8 million for the 2013 season when the deal blew up on Friday. Magid told USA TODAY Sports that beyond a problem with the fax machine transmission, the Broncos sent incomplete paperwork and revised terms of what was verbally agreed upon, causing a delay.

The Broncos disputed Magid's version, and say the signed contract arrived six minutes late.

Rule namesake: Maybe the proposed revision that will allow officials to conduct replay reviews when a coach erroneously throws a challenge flag will be known as The Jim Schwartz Rule.

On Thanksgiving, Schwartz threw his challenge flag to protest an 81-yard touchdown run by Houston Texans back Justin Forsett. Replays show Forsett's knee touched the ground, but because Schwartz challenged a scoring play that would automatically be reviewed, he was penalized and a chance to overturn the call was nullified.